Wild_Bill_Kelso
Senior Master Sergeant
- 3,231
- Mar 18, 2022
Ad: This forum contains affiliate links to products on Amazon and eBay. More information in Terms and rules
Thank you for the correction.The Me 210 was not lengthened by the Hungarians, this was already done by the germans who also rebuilt all surviving short-fuselage 210s
"Most famous fighter regiment in the VVS". Went into action in April 1943
"The regiment began combat operations on 9 April, at the very beginning of the battle for the Kuban. This campaign is considered pivotal in the history of Soviet VVS. Over the course of two months of intense battles with the best fighter squadrons of the Luftwaffe, Soviet pilots won strategic superiority in the air. Approximately 1100 German aircraft were destroyed, some 800 of them in the air. Western historians call this battle the "Stalingrad" of the Luftwaffe.
The pilots of the regiment fought combat operations of a corresponding nature with German fighters. The outcome of the battles in April: 289 Airacobra and 13 Kittyhawk combat sorties, in which were conducted 28 aerial engagements. Shot down were Bf-109E-14, Bf-109F-12, Bf-109G-45, FW-190-2, Ju-88-4, Do-217-1, and Ju-87-1. Of these, Guards Captain A. I. Pokryshkin shot down 10 Messers, Guards Senior Lieutenant V. I. Fadeev 12-Bf-109s, and Guards Senior Lieutenant G. A. Rechkalov 7 Messers and 1 Ju-88."
16 GIAP claimed 71 Bf109's (out of a total of 79) and at best 7 or 8 are verified victories, while losing 19 P-39s, so they have a negative exchange rate no matter what types they actually shot down.
4VA's claims for 405 (out of 521 total claims) Bf 109's certainly suggest a similar pattern by the other fighter units.
Well, even assuming that is accurate (are you counting forced landings after combat?), 8 x Bf 109s vs 19 x P-39s is a 1 - 2.4 ratio, which is almost twice as good (1-4) as the average Soviet fighter unit at that time, and this is only in their first few weeks of using the new fighter. The oldest (P-39D-1 and D-2) variant they would end up using.
But the Soviet records say that 16 GIAP actually lost 13 Airacobras "destroyed or not returned from combat missions" in this period, with 11 pilots, and two more Airacobras lost in accidents. So that would actually be an even better ratio of 1-1.6, which is not really sustainable for the Luftwaffe, especially considering that the Soviet units - aircraft, pilots, and tactics, would only improve from that point onward.
So I can see why the Soviets were excited about the new fighter, in this context.
Overclaiming is a separate issue, as I said. More on that in a minute.
So some examples of Luftwaffe overclaiming, from North Africa via Shores Mediterranean Air War
13 October 1942 - Germans claimed 8 DAF fighters (5 P-40s, 2 Spitfires, and a P-39), losing 3. Actual Allied losses were one Spitfire Mk IV and one P-40L. So that's 8-2 or 4-1 overclaiming rate.
23 March 1943 - German pilots from JG 77 engaged with a variety of DAF fighters, claiming 5 Spitfires and a B-25. Actual losses were 1 Spitfire (destroyed in a collision) and one A-20. So that is 6-2 for a 3-1 overclaiming rate.
29 March 1943 - Pilots of II and III./ JG 77 engage with 58 and 60th Sqn 33 FG. They lose six Bf 109s and one crash landed, claiming 5 victories. Actual losses for 33rd FG were 1 aircraft, plus one lost to flak. So a 5-1 overclaiming rate for the Luftwaffe.
For the entire month of October 1942, which led into the 2nd Battle of El Alamein, the Axis Claimed 238 victories (107 by the Germans / 131 by the Italians). Actual Allied losses were 81 aircraft of all types (62 shot down, 19 crash landed). So that is just short of 3-1 overclaiming rate.
Bergstrom wrote 19 and your source wrote 13, I can't say which is correct.
However, you can't assume that 16 GIAP shot down 8 Bf 109s either; in April 18 109's were lost by compared to the 405 claimed by 4 VA; if badly damaged , bur repairable, force landed at base or in friendly territory, the tally is 34.
The total 521 claims by 4VA is about 7 times the 77 Lw losses, that's high but not worse than some other campaigns during the war. It is the claims against Bf 109s that are remarkable, 22,5 or 13 times depending on how you want to count the losses.
The improved LaGG-3 (e.g., Batch 66) in Sepember, 1943 at the end of production was not much better than the Yak-1b in November, 1942. LaGGs of the last batches were manufactured in Tbilisi (State Aviation Plant No.31), where the manufacturing culture was remarkably worse than in Gor'ky (State Aviation Plant No.21) even for the Soviet quality level.The Soviets made a lot of incremental improvements through the war, the Yak-9, Yak-1B, and Yak 3 all being much better in 1943 or 1944 than the earlier Yak-1 and Yak-7, and the LaGG-3 was also improved substantially during the same period (often forgotten because it didn't really get new model names), but both whole series were definitely limited by their Hispano derived inline engines, which were never improved that much.
The real breakthrough was the M-71 - it allowed to produce I-185 and Su-6/Su-8 which were far superior to Yak/La and Il-2/-10 respectively. Unfortunately the design bureau was ordered to concentrate all efforts on the M-82 only.The powerful Shvestov ASh-82 however (derived at the end of a long chain of development from the Wright R-1820) was a breakthrough, which allowed them to move into their new La 5 / 5FN / 7 / 9 / 11 series of fighters, and was also used for postwar helicopter design (the Mi 4) which was built ino the 1970s.
Pe-2 was rather far overrated. Seems, that you don't read what the other write here. Pe-2 was mostly used as a level bomber with a typical bomb loading of 600 kg, dive brakes were frequently dismounted. Only few Pe-2 regiments had pilots, which were sufficiently trained for dive bombing. Moreover, Pe-2 required well-trained pilots because of specific aerodynamic features of its wing airfoil on take-off/landing. It is still disputable, whether the choice of Pe-2 instead of SPB or even Ar-2 was optimal for the Soviets.The ASh-82 was also the motor of the Tu-2 bomber, a quite good upgrade from the already pretty capable (and I think, underrated) Pe-2 dive bomber.
There is an agreement, that the efficiency of the Il-2 was not so high as it was described by the Soviet propaganda - you can read books by Oleg Rastrenin who is the most prominent historian of the Il'yushin ground attack planes (and Soviet CAS aircraft as well) to date. Guns (both 23-mm VYa or 37-mm ShFK-37/NS-37) were not efficient against tanks. Only the proper use of PTABs made possible to destroy German armored vehicles efficiently before the Germans elaborated counter-measures. But these changes in tactics resulted in reduced maneuverability of mobile units, which was to the advantage of the Soviets. Il-2 had a primitive "bombsight", but even this feature was not used by the pilots according to "Combat capabilities of the Il-10 when operating against field artillery on firing positions" by V.Emel'yanenko, 1949 - a very interesting post-war analysis ,which you've never heard before. Now you can google who was Emel'yanenko.Some other wartime designs were more debatable, probably first and foremost the Il-2. Nobody seems to agree how good these actually were at killing German tanks, or more broadly, in the CAS role.
Only the overclaims of CAS pilots (some claimed hundreds of destroyed enemy cars/tanks/locomotives/trains/etc.) can beat the overclaims of fighter pilots.The Soviet leadership certainly seemed to like them, as they built 35,000 of them, but they also lost an enormous number of them. Efficacy of the Il-2 has become one of those ideological fault lines between the German lovers and the Soviet defenders (the Operational history section in the Wiki entry for the Il-2 reads like you can hear Wagner in the background), which spills over, bringing this ideological taint with it, into discussions about CAS in general.
Even totally obsolete I-153s and I-16s (for instance, they destroyed bridge with an oil pipe from dive in Romania in 1941 being launched from the TB-3 bomber) were sometimes more effective - at least their losses were significantly lower. But I doubt, that Pe-2s were considerably more effective against AA (even more effective at all) taking into account that they were primarily used as level bombers. In contrary, the AA suppression was a typical task for Il-2/-10 throughout the war.There does seem to be some at least sporadic evidence that Pe-2 dive bombers were considerably more effective at destroying certain types of targets like bridges and AA guns.
Despite of much better flight performance Il-10 was indeed not much more capable than Il-2 on ground targets (even better at all). Initially it had no rockets under wings and should take only 400 kg bomb load (that was one of the major reasons of significantly better flight performance). And it was much less capable to resist damages due to a "fighter" wing airfoil. The post-war modification Il-10M had already airfoil similar to that of the Il-2. In later 1944 Ils were attacked by enemy fighters much less frequently than at the beginning and in the middle of the war (less than in 15% of sorties), moreover, there were enough fighters to escort them in the vast majority of cases - the rear gunner on Il-10 was indeed simply unnecessary. Il-10 was significantly worse than Su-6 M-71F - Sukhoi developed two really good airplanes that could be extremely efficient for CAS, unfortunately they were not put into the mass production. Quite typical situation for the Soviets, who always sacrificed quality for quantity. It seems that they themselves never believed in their ability to create high-performance "masterpieces" that did not need to be produced in gigantic quantities. May be, an armor-protected CAS aircraft was not a bad idea by itself (I doubt it, however), but its implementation as Il-2/Il-10 was rather ineffective taking into account the alternatives.The Il-2 was improved substantially through the war, the biggest change being the badly needed addition of a rear gunner, but they made a lot of other smaller improvements too. They did finally replace the IL-2 with the much faster and seemingly much more capable IL-10 in 1944, but it's debatable whether the overall strategic niche (still relatively slow, heavily armored attack aircraft for CAS) was a good one. It was still being debated about the modern A-10 and Su 25 etc.
One more nonsens... Thanks to Pokryshkin's efforts, the accounting of air victories since 1943 was simplified, and the scores of Soviet aces began to grow much faster.The Soviets did reduce their overclaiming rate as the war went on
The Soviets simply loved A-20s - not only for recon. I would say, they loved it for everything - it may be the most beloved aircraft of the Allies received as part of Lend-Lease, being superior in this respect even to the Cobra. I personally heard the opinion from a Soviet "boston" pilot in late 1980s. He spoke of the airplane only enthusiastically, remembering how comfortable and reliable it was for pilots. and how capable it was as a bomber. In his opinion, he was very lucky to fly the A-20.The Soviets loved A-20s for recon.
The improved LaGG-3 (e.g., Batch 66) in Sepember, 1943 at the end of production was not much better than the Yak-1b in November, 1942. LaGGs of the last batches were manufactured in Tbilisi (State Aviation Plant No.31), where the manufacturing culture was remarkably worse than in Gor'ky (State Aviation Plant No.21) even for the Soviet quality level.
The real breakthrough was the M-71 - it allowed to produce I-185 and Su-6/Su-8 which were far superior to Yak/La and Il-2/-10 respectively. Unfortunately the design bureau was ordered to concentrate all efforts on the M-82 only.
Pe-2 was rather far overrated. Seems, that you don't read what the other write here. Pe-2 was mostly used as a level bomber with a typical bomb loading of 600 kg, dive brakes were frequently dismounted. Only few Pe-2 regiments had pilots, which were sufficiently trained for dive bombing. Moreover, Pe-2 required well-trained pilots because of specific aerodynamic features of its wing airfoil on take-off/landing. It is still disputable, whether the choice of Pe-2 instead of SPB or even Ar-2 was optimal for the Soviets.
There is an agreement, that the efficiency of the Il-2 was not so high as it was described by the Soviet propaganda - you can read books by Oleg Rastrenin who is the most prominent historian of the Il'yushin ground attack planes (and Soviet CAS aircraft as well) to date. Guns (both 23-mm VYa or 37-mm ShFK-37/NS-37) were not efficient against tanks.
Even totally obsolete I-153s and I-16s (for instance, they destroyed bridge with an oil pipe from dive in Romania in 1941 being launched from the TB-3 bomber) were sometimes more effective - at least their losses were significantly lower.
But I doubt, that Pe-2s were considerably more effective against AA (even more effective at all) taking into account that they were primarily used as level bombers. In contrary, the AA suppression was a typical task for Il-2/-10 throughout the war.
Quite illustrative is the sinking of the anti-aircraft cruiser Niobe (converted from Dutch protected cruiser Gelderland taken over by the Germans) in the port of Kotka on July 16, 1944. The Soviets were sure that they found the Finnish coastal defense ship Väinämöinen, which they hunted during the whole war. The first strike (30 Pe-2s from dive) gave zero result - all 70 bombs did not hit the target. It was necessary to increase significantly the strike group - finally it counted 131 or 132 (!!!) airplanes including escort fighters. 23 Il-2s (not Pe-2s!!!) were used to suppress AA artillery, then 11 Pe-2s hit the ship with four 250kg-bombs
, but did not sink it - the ship guns were still firing.
The Niobe was finally sunk only by 1000kg bombs from four A-20Gs (one of them was shot down) by skip-bombing. And it was one of the best Pe-2 regiments (12 GBAP of the Baltic Fleet Air Arm, commander V.I.Rakov) trained for dive bombing in the Soviet Air Forces...
Clichès, surely...
More than 130 aircraft for an obsolete AA cruiser?!!!! It sounds very funny, even more funny than 22 years old pilot-capitalist. You seem to consider the Baltic Fleet commanders to be complete idiots. But even if some admirals like Tributs deserved the most negative assessments, they were not that stupid. So, you know nothing about the hunting for Väinämöinen started in 1939. The Soviets were absolutely sure they sunk the Väinämöinen, some pilots were even awarded the title of Hero of the Soviet Union for sinking of Väinämöinen and only later analysis revealed the mistake which was never denied by the Soviets themselves! It can be found in the Soviet documents, that the ship was erroneously identified. The Soviets had no idea about the Niobe - the even didn't know about it. All these facts are well known.it looks like in the raid you were referring to the target was actually not the wonderfully named and pretty impressive looking Väinämöinen, which they couldn't find, but rather the much less impressive though fairly well armed German "AA cruiser" Niobe, which was armed with no less than 8 x 4.1" guns, 4 x 40mm Bofors, and 4 x 20mm guns, but was repeatedly hit by the Red Banner fleet aircraft, sinking with 70 hands. The heavily armed AA ship managed to shoot down one A-20 before sinking.